#48.1 Islagain






Nice drams with a sour aftertaste: Bunnahabhain

 

TL; DR: And weโ€™re back to Islay for the second time this summer! After a quiet Friday afternoon, the next morning we had our first tasting, followed by a tour at one of our favourite distilleries: Bunnahabhain. The tasting was great as usual, but what happened afterwards was a major let down for us.ย 

Driving to Islay is always a big trip: it takes about four hours to drive from Leith to the Kennacraig ferry terminal, and then the ferry trip is another couple of hours. However, once youโ€™re on the island, you forget about all of this as the atmosphere in which youโ€™re immersed is something else. Everything slows down and there is a sense of quiet and tranquillity. Itโ€™s a strange mix between feeling energised and relaxed, with the mind finally off the million thoughts of everyday life. Maybe this a feature of all remote places.

The excuse for this trip came when our friends Glaire and Clay asked us to join them on their trip to celebrate their friendโ€™s birthday. That was a proposition too good to be true, so we happily accepted. On a Friday morning, we picked them up and started driving westward, first to Glasgow and then up along Loch Lomond, past Arrochar south-west, and along the Argyllโ€™s lochs (as we write, we can almost visualise the trip). We had a wee stop for a coffee (well, and a wee) in Inveraray, at the George Hotel. We also enjoyed their morning rolls, unbelievably tasty. A pity we didnโ€™t manage to meet our friend Ivan. The rest of the drive was uneventful, everything was on time, and we got safely to Bowmore where our friends had booked a small apartment. We parked our van not too far away and hanged out with them. In the evening, after dinner at the Lochside, we met their friends for a drink at the Duffieโ€™s, just next door. It was a nice evening but we were very tired, so after a while we just went back to sleep.

The day after we were very excited: our first time back to Bunnahabhain, after our visit in spring 2022. Bunna is one of our favourite whiskies, and it rarely disappoints us: we both love the unpeated sherried stuff, and the peated one too (itโ€™s actually one of the best peated malts in our opinion). So, the jolly party of three (Glaire skipped this one) left Bowmore on Mr Vantastic, and after a quick stop to check out the Ardnahoe shop, we got to our destination. The day was cloudy, a tad windy but not enough to keep the midges away, which in the minute we spent outside the visitor centre destroyed us!

Once safely inside, we met the guide for the tasting: Matthew, which after a brief introduction walked us to Warehouse 9, the former malting floor. We were 5 people in total, so quite an intimate tour – the first time it was 13 people and felt like a crowd in comparison. The tasting was fun, as usual, Matthew was a good entertainer and very knowledgeable, and let people draw the whisky from the cask (Gianluigi tried too).

The first dram was an unpeated one, a 2007 ex-Muscat cask (16y), bottled at 53.7%. A very sweet and delicious dram. It was followed by a 2014 (9y) ex-Canasta sherry cask: this is a brand of cream sherry, which is a mix of Oloroso and PX. This dram was bottled at 58.4%, stronger at the palate as well. We moved on to the peated drams, first a 2011 vintage fully matured in a refill ex-Cognac cask (58.9%); the cask was used for a finish first, so the Cognac influence wasnโ€™t too strong. It was followed by a 2013 (10y) ex-Bordeaux red wine cask (57.9%), re-casked into this only after two years, in 2015. The last one was truly stunning, a real dirty belter of a dram.

However, here is where things went wrong. Back at the visitor centre, we were told that we could participate in the tour because weโ€™d drunk before at the tasting, and they could allow inebriated people in production. While we could see where this rule comes from (after all, we both did the 2-hour Scottish Training for Alcohol Retailers and Servers training, so we can see the logic), we really didnโ€™t expect this to happen: it wasnโ€™t written anywhere and in other distilleries (including Deanston, of the same company) we’d visited production after a tasting. There, they mentioned the T&C, which is always an โ€œout-of-jailโ€ card, but later that day we verified and that was not true (at the time, more on this later). We asked if we could have a refund, and here is the annoying part: they told us they couldnโ€™t issue any! Thus, to avoid losing ยฃ40 we decided for Teresa to go on the tour on her own (she was the driver that day, so sheโ€™d not drunk at the tasting), while Gianluigi would come back on the Monday to catch up, just before the ferry back to the mainland. The following tour description is a summary of both our tours, which were given by the same guide. They were probably in training, as both tours only covered the basics, but as we said in other occasions, you need to start somewhere.

The distillery, whose name means the Mouth of the River, was founded in 1881, originally doing peated malt, but turned to unpeated later: nowadays they do both. Their flagship malt, the Bunnahabhain 12, was first released in 1979, almost a hundred years after founding. What is really hard to wrap our head around, is that until the 60s there was no road to the distillery, so everything that went there and back was by boat, quite incredible! They have one of the iconic Porteus mills since 1964, which grinds the barley usually sourced from Simpson, on the mainland. In the resulting grist, the husk/grit/flour split is 20/70/10, as usual. It is then sent to a big mashtun (full leuter and covered by a copper lid), 8.6 tonnes at the time, where it is mashed with the usual three waters at increasing temperatures, to maximise the sugar extraction in their cloudy wort. The draff, discard from mashing, is used for their biomass plant, as opposed to many distilleries that sell or give it to farmers to feed cows.

Currently, they do 23 mashes per week, which are then moved to ferment into one of the six Oregon pine washbacks for 52 hours to reach about 8%abv. They have only one pair of stills, and during the second distillation they take a cut from 74% to 64%, discarding and redistilling the head (above the first cut point) and the tails (after the second one). After a quick nip to the warehouse and a look at the pier, we walked back to the visitor centre for the two-dram tasting. Surprisingly, there wasnโ€™t their flagship 12-year old, but a dram each of the two non-age statement expressions: Stiuireadair (unpeated), and Toiteach A Dhร  (peated). Meh.

A bit deflated, we left the distillery and drove back to Bowmore, where we had a quick meal before driving to the birthday party. There, we met some very nice people and had lot of fun, playing garden games and having delicious food. In the evening, we had a final couple of drams at our friendsโ€™ flat, before retiring in the campervan.

Honestly, this was one of the most disappointing distillery visits we had recently, which made us sad as Bunnahabhain is one of our favourite whiskies. We excused the increase in ยฃ10 for the Warehouse 9 tasting compared to 2022, although for four drams it is has became quite steep. Someone could argue that they are expensive drams, they are indeed, but the reason is that they are almost insanely priced: the 20cl bottle of the whiskies we tried ranged between ยฃ45 and ยฃ60, which is ยฃ145 to ยฃ195 for a full 70cl bottle, out of touch. Also, the choice to replace the Bunnahabhain 12 with the Stiuireadair (maybe the only bad Bunna we ever tried) in the tasting after the tour is quite a strange and cheap move. Would you imagine going to Lagavulin/Caol Ila/Ardbeg/Bruichladdich, paying for the basic tour and not getting a dram of their flagship 16/12/10/Classic Laddie? Yep, not even the Evil Empire does that.

But of course, what we really did not like was the way we were treated, and the lack of flexibility or willingness to try to fix a problem that wasn’t our fault in the first place. It’s true the staff gave Gianluigi and Clay “reparation” drams while Teresa was doing the tour, but at the same time we felt we were treated like we had done something wrong, which wasn’t true at all. At that time, it wasnโ€™t written anywhere that we couldnโ€™t do the tour after the warehouse tasting. Fortunately they recently changed the website (we wonder whether it wasn’t just us having this problem). Since the reservations were made under the same name/email, it would have costed the staff 5 minutes to touch base via email before. But what really made them unprofessional was that someone could have just told us before the tasting, when we checked in (and said weโ€™d booked both tasting and tour). We would have both got drivers drams. We later complained via email, and they promised a refund for the tours (refund still not received, at the time of writing over a month later).

To wrap up this rant: will we still drink Bunnahabhain? Definitely, itโ€™s too delicious to let go. Will we still buy from the distillery? Maybe, there are many indies out there with great Bunnas. Will we go back for another tasting or visit? Probably not for a very long time.

Stay tuned for some happier action the next day, a visit to the only Islay distillery we hadnโ€™t visited yetโ€ฆCan you guess which one? Until then, slainte!

Bunnahabhain Warehouse Tour

Price: ยฃ50.00 pp (August 2024)

Duration: 1hr 30min

Tasting: 4 drams (25ml, all natural colour and unchillfiltered), 2007, 16y, ex-Muscat cask, 53.7% (70/20cl bottles for ยฃ195/ยฃ60); 2014, 9y, ex-Canasta sherry cask, 58.4% (ยฃ145/ยฃ45); 2011 Moine (peated) fully matured in a refill ex-Cognac cask, 58.9% (ยฃ155/ยฃ55); 2013, 10y, Moine ex-Bordeaux red wine cask, 57.9% (ยฃ145/ยฃ50), and a copita to take home

Distillery Exclusive: see above

Target: whisky nerds

Value for money: a tad pricey

Highlights: Warehouse 9 is always special

Recommended: yes

Link: https://bunnahabhain.com/


Bunnahabhain Production Tour

Price: ยฃ20.00 pp (August 2024)

Duration: 1hr (almost)

Tasting: 2 drams (20ml), Bunnahabhain Stiuireadair (46.3%), Toiteach A Dhร  (46.3%)

Distillery Exclusive: see box above

Target: casual drinkers and tourists

Value for money: ok

Highlights: the still room

Recommended: if youโ€™re looking for a basic distillery tour, there are better options on the island

Link: https://bunnahabhain.com/

#47 A dip in the south

A trip to Crafty distillery

 

TL; DR: Since our first trip to Dumfries and Galloway, there is a new kid on the block down there: Crafty distillery. Previously producing gin and vodka, now they added whisky (well, newmake for the time being) to their portfolio. As the name suggests, their operation is quite small andโ€ฆโ€craftyโ€ indeed, very interesting. 

Part of the fun of having a campervan is to have the freedom to decide on a trip at the very last minute, without worrying about accommodation (which in Scotland can be quite tricky, both in terms of availability and price). As usual, the idea for the trip came from a newly available whisky distillery tour, this time in Newton Stewart, in Galloway. Weโ€™d already been in the area, in 2022 for Teresa birthdayโ€™s trip, when we visited Bladnoch (and later Annandale and the Lakes distilleries). However, back then we didnโ€™t hike nor enjoy much the beautiful landscape (also, it was Marchโ€ฆand rainy). This time instead, we planned a few non-whisky activities too.

We left early on the Saturday morning, leaving a quiet and still traffic-free Leith. The first stop of the trip, just to grab a coffee and a bite, was Kilmarnock, the town that gave birth to John Walker and its 200 years old legacy. We found a nice spot on the high street (the Courtyard Artisan Bakery, delicious rolls!!), after which we had a short walk to snoop aroundโ€ฆafter all, this stop wasnโ€™t exactly random. And it paid off, we found what we were looking for: JW original shop building!

Back in the van, we drove towards Glen Trool, where weโ€™d planned to hike around the namesake Loch before going to our scheduled tour in Newton Stewart. We drove south, towards Ayr, and then in Maybole we turned slightly eastward on a narrow road (between the A713 and A714). Unfortunately, this turned out to be a bad choice (thanks Google!), as the road was interrupted with no previous signage before. So, we had to detour on even narrower roads, through North Balloch, Glengennet and Barr, to rejoin the A714 in Pinmore. It was an adventure, but it meant we were way too late to attempt a hike, so we drove directly to Newton Stewart instead, for a bite before the tour at Crafty distillery. Nothing really inspired us among the options we could find online, so we decided to park at the distillery, which is just outside the village, walk back and choose a place on the fly. However, we were in luck: that day the distillery had a special guest in the courtyard, Trikoโ€™s Deli (from Thornhill) with their delicious bagels: lunch was sorted! We still walked to the village for a coffee and to move our legs.

Back at the distillery, it was time for the tour. The distillery is an all-in-one building, with the production just behind the shop. Given the limited space, there are no warehouses on site, but they send their casks to mature a few miles south to Whiskybrokerโ€™s warehouses, in Creetown. The tour was very small, six people including us, plus Nicky, the distillery manager, who showed us around.

The distillery was founded in 2017, and at first they made gin (Hills&Harbour, quite popular) and vodka (24 Seven), plus a gin liqueur. Contrary to other small and craft gin brands, they do everything from scratch, and donโ€™t buy the neutral grain spirit to be redistilled. They have a column still for that purpose, from which, approximately once every 10 days, they distil a wash obtained from 100% wheat, getting a ~95%abv spirit. For the vodka, the wash is filtered and reduced, while for the gin it is redistilled with 11 botanicals from the coast and the forests around (hence, the name). Back to whisky, they get malted barley from Bairds in 15ton batches. As whisky production was a recent addition, the equipment is not placed in a way to follow the production stages โ€“ for example, the two stills are not next to each other. They do 2 mashes per week in a half-ton semi-lauter mashtun, starting with water at 63.5ยฐC. The wort is recirculated in the mashtun to allow filtration by the grist bed, so to get a clear wort. The second water is sparged, in a process similar to brewing. The wort is then moved in one of the two iStill washbacks, each one with a 2,000-litre capacity. Fermentation is quite long, seven days, and it is activated using three types of yeast: distillers, German wheat beer and Champaign. The washbacks are equipped with a cooling jacket to stabilise the fermentation temperature, which made sense given the small building, easy to warm up. They have two stills, a 1,000-litre wash still and a 250-litre spirit still, both with tube-and-shells condensers. The second distillation starts with a 10-minute foreshots run (the head), followed by a spirit cut between 77% and 69% abv, giving about 120 litres of spirit. It is then reduced to 63.5% and put into casks. Every fermentation provides wash for two distillations, from which they get about 250 litres of newmake spirit at filling strength. Other than the usual cask types, they use small American barrels, 110-litre only, provided by the Texas Whitmeyer distillery (now closed?).

After the production tour, we moved back into the bar/shop for the 3-dram tasting. First, the newmake spirit (63.5%), followed by two aged spirits: a 7-month old from an ex-PX octave cask (~62%), and a 6-month old from an experimental 5-litre Madeira caskโ€ฆThis reminded us of the approach Ardnamurchan had at the beginning, to mature spirit in smaller casks to have a rough idea of how it would be later. As a matter of fact, Nicky worked there before moving to the south of Scotland! The samples were good, of course very cask-forward, but still quite promising.

After the distillery, it was time to catch up our hike at Loch Trool. It was just a 30-minute drive from the distillery, so in less than an hour we were already on the path that loops around the Loch. Despite the car park being almost full, the path was not at all busy, so it ended up being a quiet walk. After the first bit, mostly inside a forest, the path opened up and the view on the loch was quite spectacular. It only rained for a few minutes, luckily so, as we were in the middle of the almost 11k walk when it happened!

For the night, weโ€™d found a great place to stay: Kirroughtree, managed by Forestry and Land Scotland. It is a leisure centre, with different trails, a mountain bike hire shop, and a cafรฉ/gift shop. However, it is possible to spend the night there (for ยฃ7.00/vehicle), and from the morning there are public toilets open with showers (well, ยฃ3 for a cold shower was not ideal, but better than nothing!). If it sounds simple, itโ€™s because it is: almost everything can be paid by card, at any time. We wonder why other places cannot have something like this (yes, we have mainly Islay in mind, but Dornoch and elsewhere too). Weโ€™re sure there are difficulties that we cannot think of in managing a night parking, but to be honest it doesnโ€™t look impossible. 

Unfortunately, there were also some midges, not too many but enough for us to spend the evening inside the van, sipping the leftover drams from Crafty. In the morning, we went for a short run on the hill (Teresa wasnโ€™t too happy about that) before a nice (and cold) shower and a good breakfast (Teresa was much happier then), once the cafรจ opened. One the way back, we did one further stop at the A.D. Rattray shop, in Maybole, becauseโ€ฆwhy not.

It was a nice trip, we really enjoyed the beauty of this part of Scotland, not as popular as other ones but still fantastic, while visiting a nice wee distillery at the same time. Crafty looks on a good trajectory spirit-wise, so we are looking forward to trying their single malt once ready.

Next week itโ€™s going to be a pause weekend, but then weโ€™ll be back on Islay! Until then, slainte!


Crafty Whisky Distillery Tour

Price: ยฃ20.00 pp + ยฃ2 booking fee (July 2024)

Duration: 1hr 15min

Tasting: 3 drams newmake spirit (63.5%), 7-month old from an ex-PX octave cask (~62%), and a 6-month old from an experimental 5-litre Madeira cask, plus a glencairn to take home

Target: everyone, but probably mostly suited for whisky curious

Value for money: good

Highlights: a nice place to chill out even if you’re not a whisky fan

Recommended: yes if you’re a whisky curious

Link: https://craftydistillery.com/

Other points of interest in the area

Loch Trool trail: https://www.walkhighlands.co.uk/galloway/loch-trool.shtml

Kirroughtree, Galloway Forest Park’s getaway centre: https://forestryandland.gov.scot/visit/forest-parks/galloway-forest-park/kirroughtree

Whiskybroker, Creetown: https://www.whiskybroker.co.uk/?age_consent=1

A.D. Rattray shop, Maybole: https://www.adrattray.com/


#46.3 The return of the smoke

Islay’s Juggernaut: Caol Ila

 

TL; DR: Back on Islay, we first visited Finlaggan, the site of the castle of the Lords of the Isles, in the middle of a loch: a charming place. We then drove to Caol Ila distillery for the first visit of the day. Itโ€™s the biggest on Islay, recently renovated, definitely worth visiting on a good day for the view from the tasting room.

(missed Part 2/Part 1?)

We rarely sleep past 8am in the campervan, but this was one of the rare occasions. A combination of cozy and nice temperature, and not too much light (also thanks to a truck protecting us from direct sunlight!). We felt well rested, and after a nip at the loos (public toilets were just on the other side of the very narrow street), we had breakfast. There wasnโ€™t enough time to do anything else, so we jumped in the vans and managed to take the first available Caolin Ferry back to Islay.

Caol Ila distillery is very close to the Port Askaig pier, and we had over an hour before the tour. Instead of hanging around, together with Justine we decided to visit Finlaggan, less than 10 minutes up the road towards Bowmore, with the last bit on a single-track road.

This is the historic seat of the Lords of the Isles, the ancient rulers of the area, before it was absorbed by the Scottish crown. Itโ€™s in the middle of Loch Finlaggan, just a few minutes walking from the visitor centre (still closed when we arrived). There used to be a castle/fortified house there, built over different centuries, but the ruins we can see today are from the 13th century. Itโ€™s a very beautiful and quiet place, definitely worth a visit if you have some time to spare. While we were visiting the site, the visitor centre opened, but we didnโ€™t have time to check it out: it was time to go visit Caol Ila distillery.

It took just a few minutes to drive back from Finlaggan, after which we left Mr Vantastic in the new parking lot, next to the electric vehiclesโ€™ charging points. From there, we walked on a very nice wooden footbridge to enter the new visitor centre, from which you get some very nice views of the production site and the Paps of Jura (to note, for accessibility you can drive closer to the building). The visitor centre is โ€œcarvedโ€ inside a warehouse, of which they sacrificed a portion for visitors. Itโ€™s clearly new, with a typical Diageoโ€™s style shop, not as nice as the Lagavulin one, but fortunately without that airport duty-free look as Taliskerโ€™s. At the bottom of the shop, there is a very long bar, and behind it, the โ€œtasting roomโ€: a few tables in front of a very large glass window with a magnificent view. On that day, the sunshine definitely made the experience memorable!

As we walked in, they offered us a welcome dram: a choice between the blended malt Johnny Walker Islay Origin (a blend of Lagavulin and Caol Ila) and the Caol Ila 14y Four Corners of Scotland (the expression they brought in, together with Cardhu, Glenkinchie and Clynelish ones, to celebrate the โ€œJohnny Walkerโ€-ification of these distilleries). A few minutes later, we gathered at the tour starting point with our guide. Our guide was very new to the job (apparently ours was their second tour ever), so it wasnโ€™t the most informative of the experiences: oh well, everyone needs to start somewhere (and we complemented the info with the Malt Whisky Yearbook 2024)!

We started in a room one floor below the visitor centre with a nosing experience of some aromas (as far as we remember, peat, supposed-sweet, sea and maritime spice?). It was followed by an 8-minute video about the history of the distillery and the crucial role it plays in DCL/Diageoโ€™s blends, accompanied by animations on a relief map, with wee boats moving from Islay to the mainland and back. There was also a very informative wall display, with the parallel histories of Caol Ila and Johnny Walker. Overall, we felt this introductory part was a bit too long (slightly over half an hour), to the point that Gianluigi started doubting that thereโ€™d be a tour of production!

It was included indeed: we went down the stairs, crossed a courtyard to the distillery building, walking past the usual Johnny Walker statue and the old visitor centre (a small office on the ground floor). First, we visited the mill room, where a Porteus mill has been grinding malted barley since 1979, when the distillery was rebuilt. The husk/grit/flour split in the grist is the usual 20/70/10%, and the grist is then moved to the full Leuter mashtun for a slow mashing process to obtain a clear wort. They are equipped with eight wooden washbacks and two stainless steel ones, where fermentation lasts around 55-60 hours. This space, where mashtun and washbcks are, is very clean and tidy and looks very similar to other Diageo distilleries, including a table where all the processes are showcased โ€œin miniatureโ€.

The still room is quite spectacular, with six stills aligned next to the glass windows. Of course, three of them are wash stills, for the first distillation (with descending lyne arms) and three are spirit stills, with straight lyne arms for the second distillation. After this, we went back to the warehouse/visitor centre, and we visited a part of the warehouse that is half-way between the two: many casks are still lying there, but the space is mainly used for other visits or tastings. There, we got to smell a few different casks from the bunghole.

Finally, it was time for the tasting, in the area the back of the bar. We knew the drill, 3x15ml drams, drivers package ready to be filled with a small funnel, and a cocktail (the alcohol-free version for Gianluigi was based on a smoky tea, quite interesting, while for the others the base was Johnny Walker Black Label 12y). We got there a bit late, so by the time the tour was supposed to end, the guide had just finished to introduce the drams (and in fact, they left us to sip on our own). We started with the Caol Ila 12y, the distillery flagship: there is a reason why this distillery is called โ€œMr Consistentโ€, as even this widely available expression (watered down to 43% and probably chill-filtered) is a nice one. The next two were the two expressions only available at the distillery: the Distillery Exclusive and the Bottle-your-own (see below for specs). Both yummy, as usual, although they were way too pricey for what they are.

Caol Ila is by far the biggest distillery on Islay, with 6.5 million of alcohol litre per annum production, and because of this it tends to be one of the go-to peated expressions for independent bottlers, at much more reasonable prices. As a confirmation, the last three Feis Ile bottlings (2022, 2023 and 2024) were available at the shop, literally gathering dust. For example, the 2024 expression is a 13y sold at ยฃ185 – who would buy it considering that indies Caol Ila’s of similar age sell for about half that price?

Once Teresa and Edo finished their drams, we had to leave very quickly, as we didnโ€™t have all the time we thought we’d have before the next visit, and we needed to get lunch too! Anyway, it was nice to finally get to see Caol Ila: probably, among Diageoโ€™s whiskies, it is the one we drank the most throughout the years. Also, this was the only Diageo distillery we hadnโ€™t visited yet (among the ones open to the public, plus Mortlach, Linkwood, Dailuaine and Auchroisk) โ€“ a six-year journey since we started with Oban in 2018. Of course, Brora is still missing – do you think theyโ€™ll will allow us in with a discount since we visited all the other ones???

Coming next, another of Islayโ€™s classic: Bowmore! Until then, slainte!


Caol Ila Flavour Journey Tour

Price: ยฃ21.00 pp (July 2024)

Duration: 1hr 30min

Tasting: a welcome dram, choice between Johnny Walker 12y Islay Origin blended malt (42%) and Caol Ila 14y Four Corners of Scotland (53%), plus 3 drams at the end, Caol Ila 12y (43%), Distillery Exclusive (NAS, first and refill ex-bourbon and first fill re-charred California red wine, 57.4%) and Fill-your-own batch 2023/003 (10y, 1st fill ex-bourbon cask, 55.1%)

Distillery Exclusives: Distillery Exclusive Caol Ila (NAS, 47.4%, ยฃ100) and Fill-your-own batch 2023/003 (10y, 55.1%, ยฃ130)

Target: tourists and beginners

Value for money: good

Highlights: the tasting room facing the sound of Islay and Jura

Recommended: only if youโ€™re really keen, but we think there are better options on the island for a standard tour (the view makes it worth though)

Link: https://www.malts.com/en-gb/distilleries/caol-Ila


#45.2 Stepping over the (Highland) line!

Back in the Lowlands

 

TL; DR: After Glengoyne distillery, we headed down back to the Lowlands. First Dumbarton, then Auchentoshan. We had a very in-depth tour, which was great, and we could appreciate every bit of their unique triple distillation process. Worth the money, just a shame the drams were basic. 

(missed Part 1?)

As we came out Glengoyne distillery, we definitely needed some food. Fortunately, we had a couple of sandwiches we got earlier at the Turnip the Beat cafe, quite delicious ones, which we devoured in the Glengoyne visitors parking lot (thus, already in the Lowlands). We soon left though, heading first towards Loch Lomond, and then south. We had a few hours to spare, so we went to Dumbarton, which weโ€™d never visited before.

Dumbarton used to be home to the namesake grain distillery, and (on the same site) the Inverleven single malt distillery. Both distilleries started producing in 1938, Inverleven was then closed in 1991 and Dumbarton in 2002. Today there is a housing development on the site, which kept some of the red brick buildings. Other than that, the only remaining signs of this town whisky history are the massive warehouses on the road to Glasgow. We parked at the bottom of the Dumbarton Rock, a huge volcanic plug with a castle on top of it (you guessed it, the Dumbarton Castle). Unfortunately, the castle was closed due to illness (!!!), so we only took a short stroll in the garden below the rock, near the estuary of the river Leven, and then got a coffee and a light bite in town.

The coffee break was longer than we thought, so we had to sprint to Auchentoshan distillery right away. We got there at the exact minute the tour was starting (although weโ€™d called them to warn we could be late). Our guide was Anya, who started the tour with some history: the distillery was founded in 1817 (licensed in 1823), and the name means the โ€œcorner of the fieldโ€, referring to where the barley was initially harvested. As a matter of fact, there used to be a farm on site since the 1500s.

Moving to production, for the mashing they use 7 tons of barley sourced from the big maltsters (Baird, Simpson and Crisp), which goes into a semi-Lauter mashtun with the usual three waters at increasing temperature. Anya told us theyโ€™d just replaced a manual scale with an electronic one, but apparently the new scale needs recalibrating so often that the time savings are not substantial: not all trials go well, we guess. After mashing, the sugary wort is moved to one of the nine washbacks (four made of Oregon pine, five of stainless steel), for a 70h fermentation.

Semi-Lauter mashtun at work.

One of the peculiarities of Auchentoshan is their triple distillation, a practice that was once common in the Lowlands distilleries, but gradually disappeared. Now other distilleries we visited do some triple distilled runs at times (Benriach, Benromach, Sprinbgank/Hazelburn, Glengyle), but Auchentoshan remained the only one doing it regularly, before the very recent reopening of Rosebank distillery, in Falkirk. The wash still can hold 17,500 litres, the intermediate 8,200 litres and the spirit still 11,500 litres. Anya described the process well, but it was also good to have, right in front of the stills, a scheme describing everything in detail โ€“ it made it more intuitive. Being triple distilled, the spirit has a higher abv than usual: they take a cut between 82.6% and 80%, average 81%.

After the still room, Anya walked us into the warehouse, where she explained the maturation process while letting us look at different cask types. Casking and blending donโ€™t happen on site, but in Springburn, where the other Suntory facilities are located.

Finally, we went back to the distillery for the tasting, in the same tasting room/bar where we had our tasting back in 2021, above the visitor centre entrance and shop. This time the tasting was not so good – we got a dram of the American Oak (40%, non-age statement, apparently mostly 6y, with some 5y, whisky) and of the 12y (40%), that is, the two most basic expressions. The wee mug they gave us to take home, instead of the usual gleincarn, was a very nice touch, though. We get that this was the entry level tour, but it wouldnโ€™t have costed them much to replace the American Oak with another more โ€˜advancedโ€™ expression: in the shop they have both Bartenderโ€™s Malt limited editions, batch 01 (47%) and 2 (50%), the Sauvignon Blanc cask finish (47%), the travel retail range and a couple of distillery exclusive bottlings (see below), so plenty of options (in theory). Fortunately, at the shop they gave us a wee taste of one of the distillery exclusives, a delicious 9y sherry matured whisky, from an Oloroso cask (59.7%).

Two drams and a wee mug.

At first, we were not sure whether it was a good idea to do the basic tour, but in the end Anya was a great host: very clear and precise when describing the production process of this very unique distillery, she really made our day, so we were happy that we’d decided to go for it. As we said, the dram selection could have been better (yes, in this respect we could have opted for a different โ€˜experienceโ€™), but this has nothing to do with the guide.

Stay tuned for more whisky action, some smoky stuff coming soonโ€ฆUntil then, slainte!


Auchentoshan Origin Tour

Price: ยฃ18.00 pp (June 2024)

Duration: 1hr

Tasting: 2 drams, Auchentoshan American Oak (40%) and 12y (40%), plus a complimentary mini-mug

Distillery Exclusives: Auchentoshan hand-bottled  distillery 9y Oloroso cask (59.7%, distilled 22/10/14, bottled 1/6/24, ยฃ90/30 for 70/20cl) and 22y Oloroso cask (56.2%, distilled 15/10/02, ยฃ250 for 70cl)

Target: tourists and casual drinkers

Value for money: good

Highlights: the triple distillation process showcase

Recommended: yes

Link: https://www.auchentoshan.com/


#45.1 Stepping over the (Highland) line!

An old acquaintance, Glengoyne

 

TL; DR: We took advantage of a free weekend to get on the van and go for a night away in the (not so wild) wilderness. The next morning, we visited Glengoyne distillery: a very nice tour, although very basic, which ended in a lovely tasting room with some very tasty drams! 

In recent months we had been quite busy, for various reasons: friends visiting, visiting friends, unfortunately work as wellโ€ฆ so, except for the Spirit of Speyside weekend, weโ€™ve not enjoyed much our van. In early June though, we had a weekend with no commitments, so wedecided to spend a night out, not too far away, in the area between Stirling, Glasgow and the Trossachs. This area sits across the Highland Line (roughly, very roughly following the Highland Boundary Fault), which historically was used to separate the taxing regime of whisky producers in the Lowlands and Highlands: we basically spent the weekend crossing it back and forth!

Weโ€™re not new to the area: back in February, we’d spent a lovely evening in Fintry, together with our friend Justine, having a meal at the Fintry Inn, followed by a few nice drams from the Uncharted Whisky Co independent bottler, which has strong ties with the pub (in our understanding, itโ€™s also their tasting room). This time, we aimed for another pub that welcomes campervans, the Pirn Inn in Balfron. The drive was uneventful, but when we got there, we realised they didnโ€™t have a kitchen: dโ€™oh! So, we had to go find food. First, we tried the Old Mill in Killearn, but it was super-busy (in part because of a beer fair they had on for the weekend). Moving on, second time charme: the Clachan Inn in Drymen. We were lucky: it was very busy, which surprised us, before realising it is on the West Highland Way, already swarmed with hikers this time of the year. They found us a table at the bar to be shared temporarily with a couple waiting for their table at the restaurant: we had a nice chat, and as the man was a dairy farmer, Gianluigi asked some questions about farms management and diseasesโ€ฆprofessional bias. After dinner, we quickly drove back to the Pirn Inn, where we had a last pint and a dram (Bunna 12 never disappoints!), before going to sleep.

An ugly glimpse of a much more beautiful spot.

In the morning, the sky was cloudy. We woke up rested, and we somehow managed to avoid midges invading the van, probably thanks to the previous night breeze. We tried to look for an open cafรจ, but we were unluckyโ€ฆ so after a stop for the loo, we drove towards our first destination: the Devilโ€™s Pulpit. The Carnock Burn goes through a very beautiful gorge, all green and brown. Youโ€™d almost expect to find something like this in a tropical jungle, rather than in the Southern Highlands (or Lowlands?). The parking spot can only take three cars (if well parked), so we left Mr Vantastic at a bigger lay-by at the cross of the A809-B834 roads, from where we had to walk no more than 10-15 minutes to find ourselves at the top of the gorge. It was very nice, although we were slightly upset by the amount of garbage found all over the place: from the lay-by, to the side of the road, and in the gorge itself: how can people be so inconsiderate?

Back to the van, it was time to drive to our next destination: Glengoyne distillery (with a brief stop at the Turnip The Beet for tasty coffee and snacks). Glengoyne is an old acquaintance , as we visited it during the pandemic years (can we say that?) in summer 2021, but at the time we couldnโ€™t tour production because of COVID19 of courseโ€ฆand the waterfall was empty too! Gianluigi had also visited it as part of a networking event after a conference he attended in Glasgow in 2018: too many people, it wasnโ€™t such a memorable experience.

We parked on the south side of the road, which together with their warehouses, is in the Lowlands: the road is the boundary, apparently. Thus, as you can guess, the distillery is in the Highlands. It is owned by Ian McLeodโ€™s Distillers, together with Tamdhu, the newly rebuilt Rosebank, and a the soon to-be-built Laggan Bay, on Islay (in our understanding they also have acquired a single malt distillery in India). As we came out the parking, a hostess pointed us to the check-in for the tour, which started a few minutes earlier in the courtyard. Our tour guide was Diane, โ€œfae Glasgowโ€, and the other two people on the tour were a father-and-son couple from Canada.

In a small exposition room, Diane explained us that the distillery has always been Scottish owned since its foundation and licensing in 1833. It must be one of the few among the old ones, we reckon. Glengoyne means โ€œthe valley of the geeseโ€, and it is located in Dumgoyne (โ€œthe hill of the geeseโ€), hence why you can find this bird on the label.

We quickly moved to production, which is fairly standard. First, Diane showed us a destoner dating back to 1912 and the mill, which we couldnโ€™t take a picture of. The barley varieties they use are mainly Sassy and Lauriet, although one week a year they use Golden Promise, all coming from the East of Scotland.

A shiny mashtun.

The mashtun has a copper lid, and it takes 16,000 litres of water at 63.5ยฐC for the first water, followed by the usual two waters at higher temperatures to maximise the sugar absorption during mashing. Fermentation takes place in one of the six Douglas Fir wood washbacks and lasts about 56 hours, a rather short one. The newmake spirit is obtained after a usual double-distillation process, first in a wash still (16,000 litres), to get to ~20% abv (from their 8-9% wash) and then in one of the two spirit stills (5,000 litres each). Their cut points for the spirit run (what it is going into casks) are generally from 75% to 65%, and the cut is taken only after 3-5 minutes of foreshots.

After production, we visited Warehouse 1, next to the production building (not on the other side of the road): quite small, they mostly made a maturation exhibition out of it, where transparent bottles containing spirit and whisky at different stages of maturation are showed, together with the different types of casks and wood. A very interesting bit for more inexperienced visitors. Diane soon after walked us to the Managerโ€™s Cottage, where there is a very nice and relaxing tasting space, with sofas, comfy chairs and fireplaces (they were off while we were there, otherwise we could have easily taken a nap).

The tasting was ready for us: 3 drams from the core range paired with one chocolate each, from the Highland Chocolatier. First off, the 12y, bottled at 43% and matured in a combination of first-fill European oak (ex-sherry we thinkโ€ฆ20% of the total), first fill American oak ex-bourbon (20%), and not better specified refill casks (60%). Quite nice and bright. The second dram was the 18y, again bottled at 43%, but with a different composition: less refill (50%) and ex-bourbon (15%) casks, and more first-fill European oak casks (35%). This brought definitely more dark-fruity notes and richness, although not as rich and decadent as the last dram. This was a 21y, fully matured in first-fill European oak casks.

Overall the visit was nice, geared towards less whisky knowledgeable visitors though. The best part was the tasting – while we were a bit sceptical because of the low abv, these were delicious and not watery at all. A shame their prices are a bit higher than expected (in particular in the shop, and even taking into account the discount for visitors doing a tour or a tasting), which is probably the main reason we havenโ€™t connected so much with this distillery so far. However, the velvety and soothing quality of these drams was not lost on us, and we think they are perfect to share with family and friends less used to higher strength drams than us. So who knows, maybe one coming in the future?

Stay tuned for the rest of our trip, this time definitely below the Highland line! Until then, slainte!


Glengoyne Collection Tour and Tasting

Price: ยฃ35.00 pp (June 2024, plus ยฃ3.50 booking fee per transaction)

Duration: 1hr 30min

Tasting:3 drams, Glengoyne 12 (43%), Glengoyne 18 (43%) and Glengoyne 21 (43%)

Highlights: the tasting room

Distillery exclusive: Glengoyne Distillery Cask, ex-Port, 14y (56%, distilled 14/04/2010, ยฃ200…!)

Target: the whisky curious

Value for money: good

Recommended: yes

Link: https://www.glengoyne.com/


#44.5 Spirited in Speyside

Auchtโ€ฆ Actrhโ€ฆ. Aucrโ€ฆ Auchroisk!

 

TL; DR: Our final day at the Spirit of Speyside started with the Whisky Fair in Dufftown, a mini-whisky festival in the festival. Then we visited Auchroisk with its huge production, filling and cask warehousing facilities. A great visit ending with the usual stingy whisky tasting. 

(missed Part 4/Part 3/Part 2/Part 1?)

We woke up under a grey sky, but the temperature wasnโ€™t too cold. We had a quick breakfast under the trees, before going to take advantage of the toilet in a nearby Tesco Extra (well, thatโ€™s the downside of wild camping in villages or towns).

Soon enough, we were driving towards Dufftown, together with Justine (although in separate campervans, our Mr Vantastic and her Post Dram Prat). Once there, we had a second breakfast (or early lunch) in a fairly new cafรจ, almost in front of the clock tower, called the Cozy Coo: delicious food! Our first event of the day was the Whisky Fair, organised by local people (including our friend Sue from Glenallachie) in the Mortlach Community Hall, basically a whisky festival in the festival, which runs on the Saturday and the Sunday.

This one was delicious!

The ticket included some food and a hot drink (very nice touch), but the money would be donated to the local Whisky Museum. Most of the stands belong to small independent companies, among which Dramfool, Murray McDavid, Lady of the Glen, Moffat distillery (we finally tried their newmake spirit: definitely different from most, way less fruity and way more crรจme-caramel-like notes), Cabrach distillery (soon to be opened). An exception was Angus Dundee distillers, pouring both Glencadam and Tomintoul – Gianluigi could finally try the Tomintoul 14y weโ€™d bought two days before. We also got a sample of Glencadam 18y to take home, such a delicious dram! Overall, we really enjoyed this event and the relaxed atmosphere, weโ€™ll definitely book again if we go back to the Spirit of Speyside next year.

Around 1.30pm (late) we left the fair, and we drove to our next destination: Auchroisk distillery. Google made us go through some backroads but didnโ€™t realise there were some detours due to roadworks, so what was late became very late, and we parked exactly when the tour was supposed to start. Fortunately, a member of staff was waiting for us (and other latecomers), and walked us where the tour was about to start. The tour was given by Debbie, the site manager, and Stephen, an operator, and as a first thing they gave us a vest and a hard-hat: safety first!

The Auchroisk distillery is relatively recent, they started building it in 1972 and the first mash was done in 1974, so โ€˜justโ€™ 50 years ago! It looks more modern than most distilleries indeed, and the vanilla-coloured building almost gives it a mediterranean/hispanic twist (we realise this might a bit of a stretchโ€ฆ). The name, which means red stream, was taken from the nearby farm, which was bought to get access to the well. The name was (and is) so hard to pronounce that the whisky got called the Singleton, before Diageo decided to reassign this brand to the Dufftown, Glendullan and Glen Ord distilleries. Obscure to many, we knew the distillery from early days thanks to tastings at the Scotch Malt Whisky Society, but we didnโ€™t know it is actually a big one (almost 6 million litre of pure alcohol per annum capacity!).

Their weekly barley intake is around 312-330 tons, split in 10 loads, currently mostly Diablo and Lauriet varieties (and another one we couldnโ€™t quite get). Unlike many distilleries, the grist split (grit/husk/flour) they get from the big red mill (not sure if a Porteus, but they didnโ€™t mention it soโ€ฆ) is not the usual 70/20/10, as they aim for a higher share of flour to get more starches. They mash 12.5 tons of grist, initially with 47,000 litres of water at 63.5ยฐC for about 45 minutes. Then, 25,000 litres of wort is pumped out, and the water temperature is increased to absorb more sugars until 78ยฐC for 2.5-3 hours. They have 8 stainless steel washbacks, where the wort is moved while cooled down to 17.5ยฐC through a heat exchanger. Fermentation only lasts 46 hours (probably one of the shortest we heard so far!). The washbacks are quite big, 52,200 litres, and they use 250l of yeast per mash. The wash is then distilled first in one of the four 13,000-litre wash stills, and then in a 7,000-litre spirit still (all heated with steam coils, steam obtained from a biodiesel boiler). The spirit cut from the second distillation is from 75.5% to 65%.

This part is quite similar to many other Diageo distillery. However, on top of such big production site, they also have a filling station facility that served many distilleries located in the North of Scotland (not only Diageo ones). This facility and cask storage (we didnโ€™t quite get the number though) is really huge: a team of 42 people fills about 3,000 cask per day, at a filling strength between 63% and 68% depending on the product destination.

Debbie opened the doors of a warehouse, and we couldnโ€™t help but notice the number of casks from ghost distilleries that we lost throughout the years: Pittyvaich, Glen Mhor, Lochside, Glenesk, Millburn, Linlithgow, Imperial, Banff, Dallas Dhu, Rosebank, Convalmore, as well as their second ever cask and a 1984 (Gianluigiโ€™s birth year) Cragganmore! We really do hope those malts wonโ€™t end up in the Johnnie Walker Blue Ghost shenanigansโ€ฆbut probably we wonโ€™t be able to try them anyway.

This is old…said the old man.

After this, we were walked to the main offices for the tasting. They offered 3x10ml drams, quite stingy in the face of the 80 quid tour price (unlike last year, this time there was no welcome cocktail). Anyway, we started with the Flora and Fauna Auchroisk 10y: a very delicious single malt, one of the best from that range in our opinion, and solid despite the 43% (mostly from refill ex-bourbon casks). The second dram was a cask sample, 14y from an ex-bourbon cask (51.9%), produced in a period when they were aiming for a โ€œgrassyโ€ spirit. Finally, a 20y from the Diageo Special Release 2010 (58.1%), from European oak casks. The middle one was the winner for us, but they were all delicious.

Again, as last year, Diageo distilleries surprised us for the incredible facilities they have, and for the knowledge and enthusiasm of their staff. And their willingness to show around whisky nerds like us, and the tasty spirit they produce. Such a shame the company doesnโ€™t seem to care much – should we consider ourselves lucky to be able to visit a normally closed distillery for ยฃ80? Weโ€™ll leave this one with you.

After this, we slowly drove (well, Teresa didโ€ฆ) home, while Gianluigi depleted his stock of gummy candies. Another Spirit of Speyside under our belt, such a great festival! Different to last year, this time we also attended some non-distillery related events, which really improved our enjoyment of the festival overall – we still did a lot of things, but it didn’t feel rushed as last year. Weโ€™ll see whether we’re able to come up with an even better plan for next year.

Until next time, slainte!


Auchroisk Tour and Tasting

Price: ยฃ80.00 pp (Spirit of Speyside 2024)

Duration: 2hr

Tasting: 3x10ml drams, Auchroisk 10 (43%, Flora and Fauna), cask sample 14y (ex-bourbon cask, 51.9%), 20y from the Diageo Special Release 2010 (European oak casks, 58.1%)

Target: whisky geeks

Value for money: just OK

Highlights: the filling facility and the warehouse

Recommended: yes if you’re a whisky nerd

Link: https://tickets.spiritofspeyside.com/sales/events/2024-festival/auchroisk-distillery-tour


#44.4 Spirited in Speyside

A day at Tormore, a night at Glen Moray

 

TL; DR: After admiring it so many times from the outside, we finally visited the Pearl of Speyside, Tormore – thanks to the new ownership, Elixir Disillers, who opened it to the public for the festival. What an incredible site! Cherry on the top of a great day, a fun Star Wars themed tasting at Glen Moray.

(missed Part 3/Part 2/Part 1?)

Despite our lay-by being slightly on a slope, we slept well and woke up well rested. We really liked the campsite, very quiet and very clean too! We had a quick breakfast, and we started getting ready to go asap.

We were going to visit one of the most beautiful distilleries in the area, and one that is unmissable when you drive on the A95, past Grantown-on-Spey and before Ballindalloch, as you enter the heart of Speyside: Tormore! The distillery was owned for a few years by Pernod Ricard/Chivas Brothers, but it was eventually (and thankfully) sold to Elixir Distillers in 2022 (which in the meanwhile is also building the Portintruan distillery on the Kildalton coast, on Islay). Of course, they decided to open it up to the public for the festival, to give whisky nerds a chance to visit the site.

Our original plan was to get a bigger breakfast near Grantown-on-Spey indeed, but we ran out of time, so we just stopped in Aberlour, at our usual Gatherโ€™n Cafรฉ, a safe choice (although this time they were a bit slower than usual, so we had to run to get to our event on time).

As we approached the distillery, staff members showed us where to park (they are not equipped for tourists, yet). As we checked in, the distillery manager Polly Logan welcomed us with a small Elixir Distillers branded water bottle and a couple of stubs for drams or other drinks, and pointed us to the building where the tasting would take place. The event was called Perfecting the Pearl Masterclass (referring to the distillery as the Pearl of Speyside) and included a tasting and the Tormore Open Day (which was ยฃ25 alone), so the possibility to join one of the many production tours and visit the water source.

The tasting was held in the filling store, where theyโ€™d set up a pop-up bar and many tables. There, we found some of our fellow drammers: Robert, John from the Edinburgh Whisky Group, Richard from Whisky Concerto, and later on the barfly Graham Fraserโ€ฆand of course Justine, who was already with us. Back to the tasting, we had four drams, all Tormore: first two, a 1994 and a 1999, both ex-bourbon casks. Then, two younger drams finished in ex-sherry casks, but with a twist โ€“ the sherry casks used for the first dram were from a Spanish cooperage that builds casks with a different style compared to many others. This was slightly reflected on the drams, with the second bringing classic sherry flavours, while the other one was more subtle, and the sherry influence was not that overt. It would have been more interesting if we remembered the names of the cooperages, but hey ho. Overall, a very interesting tasting, drawing a bright picture for the future of Tormore whisky.

After the tasting, instead of getting some food at the truck that was there for the open day (like the charity pop-up stands set up in a storage warehouse), we queued to join a distillery tour: Mark, a warehouseman, took us a few minutes later. The distillery was completed in 1960, but started distilling in 1959, when there was still no roofโ€ฆapparently there was a race to start distilling among nearby distilleries. Their Porteus mill however is dated 1965, and Mark said they didnโ€™t know what was there before or where the mill came from. Each lorry of barley (unpeated) will fill slightly more than one of their silos, before being crushed and put into their 10.4 tonnes full Leuter mashtun. They add 40,000 litres of water at 65ยฐC, followed by the usual other two runs of water at increasing temperatures.

Nobody knows where this came from.

The mash is then moved to one of the 11 washbacks, which are spread around the site. Fermentation is a combination of short (52 hours) and long (100 hours), and is triggered by cream yeast. Finally, distillation is done with one of the four couples of wash and spirit stills, in the majestic (almost cathedral-like) still room. Here we got an interesting info: for 3 years (with potentially an extension to 5) they are only producing for themselves 3 months a year, which is when they are able to experiment more with fermentation and cut points. The rest of the year they produce spirit for Chivas Brothers, and as a result, they filled their first own cask in September 2023 only.

The still room from above…beautiful!
…And a glimpse from below.

Once the tour was finished, we had some fried food, and then took a walk first to the cooper demonstration and then to the source of water: a very nice small lake, that we could reach with a 5-minute walk along the burn on the side of the distillery. Later on, for an extra tenner, we could attend another event where people who used to work at the distillery told some funny stories from the past decadesโ€ฆvery romantic, but it also reminded us how important the current environmental and health-and-safety rules are. They gave us two drams, the same Tormoreโ€™s available to buy on the day, a small vatting of 8yr bottled for the Whisky Trail (50%, ex-bourbon cask, vintage 2015), and a 25yr (ex-bourbon cask, 47.1%, vintage 1997) under the Single Malts of Scotland brand. Both tasty, and showcasing how good is Tormore, especially in ex-bourbon casks.

As the event ended, we started moving towards our next destination: Elgin, and the Glen Moray distillery. Together with Justine, we parked our vans in a quiet parking lot, near the rugby pitch, and walked our way to the distillery. As it was May the Fourth, the tastingโ€™s theme was obviously Star Wars: it was fun to see Emma and Iain from Glen Moray in, respectively, a resistance commander and stormtrooper costumes. They also hired a cosplayer company (we guessโ€ฆ?) so we were welcomed by wookiees (some of them  a bit scary), other imperial scouts and Bo Katan herself! Of course we brought our little Grogu with us, we had to. They offered cookies and sweets with the tasting, although to quote Iain, it looked more like a kids party rather than a whisky tasting.

The welcome dram was the new-ish release from Glen Moray for the wide market, Phoenix Rising (40%, new charred oak), which despite of the 40%abv is a nice sipper, potentially a good introduction to the distillery. Then Iain handed over to Hans Offringa (from the Whisky Couple), who presented a new independent bottler called Saltire, based in Falkland (in Fife, not in South America), whose first release is in fact a Glen Moray (17y, 48.8%, 2nd fill ex bourbon hogshead). Hans explained that they will focus on malts from 14 years of age on.

First part of the tasting, a very interesting start.

The third dram was from the current distillery bottlings, a vintage 2008 (15y) ex-Manzanilla sherry cask, bottled at 54.1%abv. At that point, we took a break and went to the warehouse to take some pictures with the cosplayersโ€ฆGrogu enjoyed that part.

Back to the visitor centre and bar, we were talked through a presentation by someone who actually โ€˜livedโ€™ the Star Wars movies: Frazer Diamond. He was a kid at that time, who played one of the Jawas (those popular, small, hooded people who collect spaceships and droids scraps). This was because his father, Peter Diamond, was the stunt coordinator on set, and helped organise most of the fighting scenes in the original trilogy, and also played many of the demised stormtroopers in various scenes.

After his (a bit long but very interesting) slideshow, we had another three drams: first, one from the Warehouse 1 range, a collection of small batches of interesting and different expressions compared to the standard Glen Moray range. This was an 8yr fully matured in ex-Rioja red wine casks, bottled at a whooping 59.8%. It was followed by another dram presented by Hans, an 11yr Scotch Malt Whisky Society from a 1st fill ex-bourbon barrel, bottled at 58.9% (bottling number 35.389). Finally, we tried a peated one, another ex-Rioja matured dram, again from the Warehouse 1 range, this time an 11y and bottled at 58.8%.

Another great day at the Spirit of Speyside, with a fun Star Wars twist. Stay tuned to know about our final day at the festivalโ€ฆuntil then, slainte!


Perfecting the Pearl Masterclass

Price: ยฃ65.00 pp (Spirit of Speyside 2024, including the open day)

Duration: 1hr for the tasting, plus the rest of the day for the open day

Tasting: 1994 ex-bourbon cask, 1999 ex-bourbon cask, two ex-sherry finished drams

Target: whisky geeks

Value for money: very good!

Highlights: the still room

Recommended: yes

Link: https://elixirdistillers.com/distilleries/


#44.1 Spirited in Speyside

Catching up Kininvie

 

TL; DR: May again, which means Spirit of Speyside again! And again, we tried to bag as many distillery tours as we could. First off, the mysterious Kininvie: hidden behind their stablemate Balvenie, itโ€™s a treasure to be foundโ€ฆand weโ€™ll have a pleasant surprise too! 

In the last couple of years, the Spirit of Speyside has become one of the unmissable events for us. Itโ€™s a festival, but it doesnโ€™t feel like one, probably because of the wide area the events are spread around: the whole of Speyside! There are so many events: fairs, walks, tastings, tours, even runs! Of course, for us it is a good opportunity to visit distilleries that are normally closed to public. In 2023 we managed to visit โ€œa fewโ€, this year we tried to do the same.

This year we made our long weekend a wee bit shorter: from Thursday to Sunday only, skipping the Wednesday and the Monday. It was enough, because, unlike last year, we managed to book all the distilleries we wanted to visit over 4 days! The only ones we decided to pass on were Glen Keith (the event is insanely expensive, like  north of ยฃ250โ€ฆ yes, it included Strathisla, which we visited twice already, but still a brainfart) and Glenglassaugh (the event was pricey, ยฃ200, but included visits at Benriach and Glendronach too, transport and lunchโ€ฆnot a bad deal, but still too much considering all the other visits weโ€™d planned).

The first distillery we hit this year was Kininvie, in Dufftown. It is owned by W. M. Grants, like Glenfiddich and Balvenie. Actually, weโ€™d already visited most of the distillery during our fantastic tour of Balvenie in 2021, with James. Mash-tun and washbacks are indeed in the same building as Balvenieโ€™s ones, and the mill is actually the same! This time though, we will see everything about Kininvie!

Back to the trip, we left early in the morning, as the tour was at 11am (but also to avoid the silly Edinburghโ€™s rush hour trafficโ€ฆsilly because given the size of the city, it shouldnโ€™t be like that). We also left a bit earlier because weโ€™d planned to leave the van in Craigellachie, get the bus to Dufftown, walk back to Craigellachie after the tour. Everything went according to plan, except that the bus from Craigellachie to Dufftown was, like, over 20 minutes late. No problem though, we were still able to get there in time for our tour, and in the meanwhile we had time to chat to our friend Graham Fraser, who was taking the same bus to go to Glenfiddich instead. He is a fellow vPub barfly and also a โ€œdrammer aroundโ€ like us, but more experienced, with over a 100 Scottish distilleries under his belt: impressive!

After checking in at the Balvenie visitor centre, we had a big surprise: Paul (who we met at Linkwood last year) has recently moved to Balvenie and Kininvie as production manager, and would give us the tour! He is a super nice guy, and thanks to his impressive career in whisky, also extremely knowledgeable, so we were super happy about that!

The history of Kininvie is peculiar: it was built in 1990 to supply malt for blends (Grantโ€™s and later Monkey Shoulder), instead of Glenfiddich and Balvenie, kept to be bottled as single malts. They started producing on the 4th of July of the same year, and nowadays the equipment is also used to experiment with barley and yeast strains, including running a rye campaign every year before the silent season: Paul was very excited about the freedom to experiment.

The tour started with a visit of the Balvenie malting floor and kiln, which was under repair waiting for some replacement parts. After a walk in the kiln, we moved to the main production building with mill, mash-tuns and washbacks. On average they do up to 25 mashes per week, using 240 tons of barley. When they donโ€™t experiment, the barley strains used at the moment are Sassie or a mix of Sassie and Diablo, which have mostly replaced Lauriet. The barley is mashed with the usual three waters at increasing temperatures (65, 75 and 85C). Fermentation takes place in one of the 10 wooden washbacks, next door to the Balvenieโ€™s ones. They use Mauri yeast and go for either a short fermentation (60h) to get a cereal-y cloudy wort, or a long one (over 70h) to obtain a lighter and fruitier one: the one we tried was very sweet, and Teresa picked up notes of white chocolate.

Finally, itโ€™s time to visit the still room, located in a hidden (hence the name of the tour) dedicated building behind Balvenie. They have three triples of stills (with enough space for a fourth, in case of expansion), for a total of nine. Each triplet works as a unit, with one big wash still for the first distillation and two smaller spirit stills for the second one. The cut points are very variable depending on what they are producing, but usually the second distillation takes 10 hours: 1.5 to heat up, 4.5 for heads and tails and 3 for the heart run. Once at the spirit safe (the piece of equipment used to control the cut points of the distillation run), we could try some newmake spirit, at a whooping abv of 70%! A very nice touch!

After that, we moved to one of their massive racked warehouses next door, where after a brief, nerdy chat with the warehouse manager George, we tried some drams. Kininvie releases are very rare: the only one weโ€™d tried previously was during an online event in 2020, as part of the Belfast Whisky Week: the KVSM001, a 5yr triple distilled single malt matured in ex-bourbon casks. We had like it back then, so we were now quite excited and curious about the tasting at the distillery. We started with a โ€œsingle distillery blendโ€, KVSB003: a vatting of single malt (matured in European oak casks) and single grain (matured in virgin American oak) produced at the same distillery, 4yr and bottled at 48.2% abv. The second one was a component of this blend, the single grain KVSG002: it is actually a rye whisky (although we think it wouldnโ€™t comply with the American definition of โ€œrye whiskeyโ€ because the rye part was less than 51% of the mashbill, only 1 ton malted rye vs. 8.6 ton malted barley), matured in virgin American oak, distilled in 2015 and bottled in 2019 at 47.8%. These drams were both quite interesting, but we recently find rye whisky a bit too herbaceous, particularly the ones produced in Scotland and Europe. Nonetheless, we were quite excited because the labels on the bottles provided a great deal of information, a real deal for us whisky nerds!

We really appreciate such transparency!
So many details!

We then moved to a single malt, a 23yr distilled in 1991 from a combination of hogshead and sherry butts, bottled at 42.6% (a bit weak to our palate, but nicely tropical and balanced). Finally, the gem was the cask sample: a 10-year single malt from a first refill Sherry butt at 68.4% (the cask filling strength was 70.3% abv!!!): it definitely needed water, but once it opened up it was really fantastic!

About to pour something really delicious.

And with this visit, the Spirit of Speyside festival was officially underway, starting with a bang! Like we noted last year, the staff were so happy to show us around, truly a refreshing experience, and so nice to see Paul in his new role! But it was time to move to our second whisky โ€œadventureโ€ of the day, so we quickly left the distillery on foot.

Stay tuned for more on this. Until then, slainte!


Kininvie Hidden Distillery Tour

Price: ยฃ60.00 pp (Spirit of Speyside 2024)

Duration: 2hr

Tasting: 5 drams, Kininvie single distillery blended KVSB003 (single grain rye whisky and single malt), single grain rye whisky KVSG002, Kininvie 23y Single malt, cask sample (ex-sherry cask, 10y) and newmake spirit (for details see the descriptions above)

Target: whisky nerds

Value for money: good

Highlights: the still room

Recommended: yes

Link: https://tickets.spiritofspeyside.com/sales/events/2024-festival/kininvie-hidden-distillery-tou


#43 Cask finish DIY

Diary of an experiment

 

TL; DR: Have you tried to finish your own whisky in a wine cask? Well, we did, and although we already knew, we could see how hard it is. While the result was not great, we definitely learned a few things. 

This post is going to be different from others, as we wonโ€™t tell you about a distillery visit, nor a trip, nor a tasting. Weโ€™ll talk about an experiment we did recently – still a journey, if you wish.

The idea came after some thoughts on whisky maturation in casks that previously held wine. It took a while to us to realise this is a controversial topic. At first, we didnโ€™t give it much thought as it felt it was just part of the broader โ€œwineโ€ category (including Sherry, Port, Madeira, etc.), but then we noticed many whisky enthusiasts think wine cask maturation is a separate thing, often perceived as badโ€ฆ so whatโ€™s the deal with red/white wines? We had amazing drams matured in wine casks (Arran Amarone, to name a popular one, but also a stunning Glen Garioch 19y fully matured in an ex-Bordeaux cask tried at the distillery, or the Glen Moray 10 Elgin Limited Edition, finished in ex-Chardonnay casks). Let alone the STR (shaved/toasted/re-charred) casks made popular by the late Jim Swan: some can deliver a lot of flavour in a short time, which is particulatly crucial for new distilleries. However, we also had some very โ€œmehโ€ wine-matured whiskies (we wonโ€™t name names here), dull at best, so we totally get the scepticism of some.

A taste of Gianluigi’s home, Gutturnio wine.

Probably our Italian upbringings sparked further curiosity on the topic, so we did a bit of research and noticed that while maturation in casks such as Amarone, Barolo and Cabernet-Sauvignon is fairly common nowadays, lesser known red wines arenโ€™t a thing (yet). One wine in particular seems to be overlooked: Gutturnio. Typical from Piacenzaโ€™s province (Gianluigiโ€™s hometown), it is a mix of Barbera and Bonarda grapes, and comes either fizzy or still (โ€œsuperioreโ€). A thick red wine, that goes well with the greasy local cuisine, quality-wise you can find the cheapos from supermarkets, up to several tenths-of-euros per bottle. We wondered for a while, then, after a conversation with Woody and Megan from Woodrowโ€™s of Edinburgh, we decided to give it a try and start an experiment.

We asked some friends about to visit us to bring over a bottle of Gutturnio, Gutturnio Zerioli Riserva (later on Gianluigiโ€™s brother would challenge this choice as not great, but hey ho) and then we bought a 1-litre virgin oak cask (American oak, Q. alba) from Master of Malt (where it was cheaper, if you exclude some suspicious vendors on Ebay). On the 26th of August 2023 we filled the wee cask with 75cl of wine, and left it in there for a bit over 3 months.

While the cask was seasoning hidden away in a cupboard (turning it from time to time), we chose our dram. We wanted something without much cask influence, so we aimed for second-fill (or more) ex-bourbon casks. Living in Edinburgh made things easier, as we could access the two Scotch Malt Whisky Society venues, although it wasnโ€™t easy to find a whisky available both to try and purchase. We still managed to taste 6 or 7 bottlings from various distilleries, and the final choice fell on a 12-year-old Dufftown (distillery that we had the chance to walk past in our first trip to Speyside, but never properly visited), called Biting on a Bung (91.34), distilled on the 7th of July 2009 and bottled at 59.0% abv.

On the 5th of December, we disgorged the wine. To our surprise the cask was soaked – of the 75cl of wine weโ€™d put in, only 35cl came out! We knew that some absorption would happen, but not to this extent!

What was left of the entire bottle!

On the same day, we filled the cask with the whisky while leaving 20cl to ourselves, in case we messed things up (spoiler alert, we did). We didnโ€™t have a timeline in mind, we just wanted to try the whisky at different times, but here one miscalculation: we went back to Italy two weeks for Christmas, leaving it unchecked for probably too long. When we came back, we took a sample right away: a lot of colour (copper red), some typical red-wine notes on the nose (tannins and red berries), but very metallic on the palate. We hoped these metallic notes would disappear with some more time in the wood, but they didnโ€™t, so in early March, exactly 3 months after filling the cask, we disgorged it and, again, only 30cl of whisky came out (another 20cl of liquid absorbed) – 30cl of โ€˜metallic liquidโ€™, clearly not a success.

We followed up the experiment, this time not with a proper whisky but with spirit from our infinity bottle: despite leaving it in the wee cask for only a couple of weeks, the same unpleasant notes re-appeared (although not so much absorption this time). Oh well.

So, what did we learn out of this experiment? How to waste a good half-litre of whisky? Definitely, but not only that. We already thought it must be hard to properly finish a whisky in the right cask for the right amount of time, but we were surprised by how easy it is to mess up (well, probably the small size just accelerated the process)!

We made a list of variables to consider:

  1. The cask! After so many distillery visits, we know wood quality is key (but tbh we didnโ€™t feel like investing big for our random experiment)
  2. Time to season the cask with wine (maybe too much?)
  3. Time to finish the whisky (again, too much?)
  4. Climate conditions (our flat is very very dry, but thereโ€™s not much we can doโ€ฆ)
  5. Whisky robustness (maybe it was a too delicate one for this kind of experiment?)
  6. Quality of the wineโ€ฆor even the type of wine?

So many variablesโ€ฆitโ€™s really hard to wrap our heads around it, although we could sum up all these variables into one: experience, i.e. really knowing what youโ€™re doing. We clearly didnโ€™t, but thankfully this is not what weโ€™re doing for a living. Nonetheless, it was fun! Whatโ€™s next? Currently the cask is empty, but weโ€™ll try to fill it soon to avoid it to dry too muchโ€ฆwith, maybe, rum? Another wine? Let us know if you have any ideas!

Until next time, slainte.



#42.3 A weekend on Skye





Raasay, paradise

 

TL; DR: As we woke up on the Saturday we drove to Sconser, to take a ferry to the Isle of Raasay. We visited the distillery, where we had an amazing in-depth 3hr tour and tasting, we hiked and, the next morning, we drove around this truly amazing corner of the world. 

(missed Part 2/Part 1?)

Waking up in a place like Carbost is something else. Despite the many campervans, the morning was very quiet, and the only sounds we could hear were the waves gently crashing on the shore. After packing up the bed and before getting on the move, we walked down to the pier, to get some of the fresh (very fresh!) morning sea breeze. We left Carbost after a short stop at the public toilets in front of Talisker distillery. It didnโ€™t take long to get to Sconser, and as we were slightly early, we had time to fix ourselves a coffee with the Bialettiโ€™s moka (well, still Italians after all) before the ferry to Raasay.

It was the first time on the island for us. Although geographically close to the mainland, Raasay can only be reached from Skye. The crossing was about 20 minutes, and once there we parked at the pier, where there are also public restrooms and a 24h open waiting room. The distillery was only 10-minute walking, so we decided to just walk there and see how the day would pan out. Our plan depended on the weather: if it was nice, we would have spent the night on the island, otherwise we would have taken the last ferry. It was a glorious day, so we ended up taking the ferry the next morning.

The distillery is in Clachan, just outside Inverarish, the main village. On the way there, there is an old market/barn building, now mostly abandoned. It wonโ€™t be the first one we spot, as the current population is only about 190 people (up by 30 with respect to the 161 marked on the Raasay Single Malt bottles). At that cross we turned right, leaving the Raasay House and Hotel on the left: a huge former mansion, now a tourist centre only open in high season. The main distillery building is called the Borodale House, an old Victorian house that used to be a hotel with a pub before it was bought by the company R&B Distillers to build the distillery. Other than distillery and shop, there are also a hotel, a restaurant and a bar serving hot food until mid-afternoon.

Being the off season and a Saturday, not all tour options were available, but we found one that seemed great: the Dunnage Cask Tour, which included a tour of the distillery and the bottling plant and a warehouse tasting. As we checked in at the distillery we had a brief scare: our reservation was lost in translation, apparently someone had forgotten to mark it down. The shop manager was very cool about it though, she said there we just needed to wait a bit, and as an apology she offered us a coffee (nice touch). We waited in the bar, taking advantage of the incredible view of Skye from the big windows on a very sunny day. Gabriel, our guide, arrived about 40 minutes later (directly from home). His family moved to the island when he was a kid, and he and his brothers represent a good percentage of the 30-odd distillery workers. This is his side job, while heโ€™s studying to get a medical degree. Gianluigi wondered how his life would be different if, instead of doing chemical analyses on tomato sauce, he had worked in a distillery as a student job.

Gabriel was extremely knowledgeable, and while we visited the various stages of production in the very contained area, he provided a huge amount of information. Starting with the barley, they get 30-ton a month of it from the Kintyre peninsula, and the two strains they are using are Lauriet and Concerto. For the peated runs, they get 48ppm (part of phenols per million) barley, malted using Highland peat from the north-east of Scotland. As for the milling, their grist composition is slightly different from others, with only 9% of flour, 19% of husks, and 72% of grit. Their water source is a 60m deep borehole located behind the distillery.

Mashing happens in a big 1.1-ton stainless steel closed mashtun with the usual three waters at increasing temperature, and they aim for a cloudy worth. Linked to the 5-day production week, fermentation is between 3 and 5 days. They have six stainless steel washbacks equipped with a cooling jacket, to slow down fermentation and allow the (liquid) yeast to extract โ€œas much flavour as possibleโ€. The two stills (wash-, 5000-litre, and spirit, 3600-litre) are made by Frilli, an Italian firm from Siena (like Teeling in Ireland and Inchdairnie in Fife), and the cut they take from the second distillation is usually between 75% and 65% abv. When they do peated runs, they use the cooling jacket in the lyne arm to increase reflux and get a lightly peated spirit. The peated newmake spirit comes out at about 14ppm, which is then reduced to 7-8ppm during maturation. It was actually very informative to get to know the ppm level on the liquid, especially when many distilleries only refer to the barley specification.

The production area includes a gin still, where they run the sourced neutral grain spirit with the chosen botanicals (which, of course, we donโ€™t remember). After the production tour, we took some stairs outside the building, to get to the bottling plant, on top of the hill behind the distillery. There, Gabriel showed us the manual and automatic bottling machines, but also how lots for different markets get labelled and stored until they get shipped. Back to the main building, Gabriel took us on a jeep and drove to the warehouse.

It was the time for the tasting, but first Gabriel let us take the bungs out of the casksโ€ฆan operation that took us very long, as we are both quite clumsy, but we could finally get a taste of the yummy content. The tasting consisted of six drams, one for each component of the Raasay Single Malt, their main core expression. These whiskies are matured in ex-Rye, ex-Bordeaux red wine, and Chinquapin virgin oak casks, both unpeated and peated. We knew what to expect: during the pandemic we did an online tasting of these six components, although they were not 3-year-old yet, so technically not whisky. This time these are properly whiskies, as the vintage of the cask was 2019 for the unpeated, and 2020 for the peated ones.

We loved the peated chinquapin oak, and the unpeated ex-bordeaux and ex-rye casks – one extra confirmation that, if done properly, young whisky can be delicious too. This range is available to buy at the distillery (when we visited, not the peated ones) bottled in the Na Sia range (Gaelic for โ€œThe sixโ€). While sipping the last dram, Gabriel took us around the warehouse, and we found out that they recently started using re-fill casks (initially they used only first fill).

After the tasting we were definitely ready for some food, which we got back at the distillery while trying a nip of the bottlings available at the shop (Slaintรจ Club bottlings, Year of the Dragon and others, see below in the box).

Left the distillery, it was a very nice evening, so instead of going back to the van we decided to go for a walk to the village and then to the hill behind the distillery, Temptation Hillโ€ฆdespite the cheesy name, it was quite beautiful and very relaxing. Back at the van, we had dinner, but we soon went to bed, after such a great day.

The following morning, we decided to skip the first ferry of the day to drive around the island: we probably drove along all the possible roads, talking advantage of some breath-taking landscapes – from the very north of the Island, along the mighty Callumโ€™s Road, with a very interesting story, to the south and its the old pier (and frankly, quite too many abandoned vehiclesโ€ฆ). We finally took the ferry for Skye around midday, and from there we drove almost non-stop to Leith (well, non-stop because most cafes along the road were closedโ€ฆexpect for the Apiary in Dalwhinnie, where we had some delicious cakes).  

This was one of the best experiences we had in a while, both the distillery visit (thanks Gabriel!) and the scenery. Raasay is truly a paradise that weโ€™d like to explore more, so we really canโ€™t wait to go back for a holidayโ€ฆwell, and maybe a couple of drams too!

Until next time, slainte.


Raasay Dunnage Cask Warehouse Tour

Price: ยฃ75.00 pp (February 2024)

Duration: 2-3 hr

Tasting: 6 drams from the cask, 5y cask strength unpeated ex-Rye cask, ex-Bordeaux wine cask and ex-Chinquapin oak (virgin oak), and peated ex-Rye cask, ex-Bordeaux wine cask and ex-Chinquapin oak

Distillery Exclusive: the Na Sia range (see above), Raasay Scottish Whisky Distillery of the year 2022 (4y and 10 months, finished in Quercus humboltii Colombian oak, 50.7%), Tourism Destination of the Year Celebration (4y, finished in ex-Manzanilla casks, 52%)

Target: whisky geeks

Value for money: good

Highlights: everything

Recommended: a bit pricey but totally worth it!

Link: https://raasaydistillery.com/